The silver cat¢sh, Rhamdia quelen, is endemic to North, Central and South America with high aquaculture potential and wide acceptance in the market. Breeder ¢sh were subjected to induced reproduction through hypophysation using a crude common carp pituitary extract. Egg characteristics, oocyte surface ultrastructure and histology of larval ontogenesis until whole yolk resorption were described for the ¢rst time for this species. Oocytes and semen were obtained by manual extrusion, and fertilization was conducted using the dry method. After fertilization, eggs were kept in incubators at 24 1C. The embryonic development was monitored using a stereomicroscope every 10 min until hatching. To analyse the larval development, larvae samples were collected from incubators daily until the ¢fth day, ¢xed in Bouin's £uid and subjected to routine histological techniques. The oocyte extrusion occurred 8 h after the second hormone dose at 26 1C. The oocytes were spherical, non-adhesive and yellow, with a diameter of 1471.75 AE 47.63 mm. Scanning electron microscopy revealed a thin jelly coat covering the zona radiata in the animal pole around the micropyle. The blastopore closure occurred within 8 h after fertilization, and the fertilization rate was 79.9 AE 5.2% at 24 1C. Embryonic development was completed within 25 h 30 min after fertilization. The complete resorption of the yolk and the formation of the digestive system organs and the mouth opening occurred on the ¢fth day, indicating a need for exogen-ous feeding. The results of this study provide information important for improvement in R. quelen culture and management. Early development of silver cat¢sh M P deAmorim et al. Early development of silver cat¢sh M P deAmorim et al.
Oocyte morphology, embryogenesis and early larval development were compared in Hoplerythrinus unitaeniatus, Hoplias lacerdae and Hoplias malabaricus (Characiformes: Erythrinidae) by macroscopical, histological, histochemical and ultrastructural analyses. The eggs of the three species were yellowish and adhesive, containing carboxyl and sulphate radicals in the glycoconjugates of the zona radiata. A complex surface arrangement was identified in oocytes of H. unitaeniatus and H. lacerdae, while H. malabaricus had a simple oocyte surface pattern. Lectin histochemistry revealed different carbohydrate terminal residues in cortical alveoli, outer zona radiata and follicular cells of the three species. At the animal pole, the oocyte surface topography surrounding the micropyle was species-specific. The micropylar cell was ConApositive, suggesting the presence of carbohydrates with mannose/glucose terminal residues that could have a role during fertilization. The erythrinids exhibited a prolonged embryonic and larval development compared to other Characiformes, a reproductive strategy used for increasing offspring protection. Early development proceeded most rapidly in H. unitaeniatus, followed by H. malabaricus and then H. lacerdae, which could have more developed parental care behaviour. An adhesive organ composed of secretory prismatic cells protruding from the cephalic region of the three erythrinid larva allowed them to attach to one another during development. Reproductive behaviour and early developmental strategies were similar in the three species, but the oocyte surface morphology suggests a close relationship between H. unitaeniatus and H. lacerdae.
Semicystic, a rare type of spermatogenesis, was detected in the characid Hemigrammus marginatus and characterized by cysts hatching during the spermatid phase and maturation of the spermatozoa being completed at the lumen of the anastomosed seminiferous tubules. Primary spermatogonia, or type A, are distributed along the entire length of the seminiferous tubules, in an unrestricted spermatogonial pattern. H. marginatus spermiogenesis is included in type I, mainly characterized by presence of nucleus rotation. During this process, a vesicle resembling the acrosomal vesicle is visualized at the anterior region close to the nucleus of the early spermatids, however this structure did not remain in the spermatozoa. In H. marginatus, the spermatozoon is uniflagellated, primitive, type I aquasperm, with a rounded head, a short midpiece and a long flagellum with the axoneme in a 9 + 2 microtubules arrangement and no lateral fins. Residual spermatozoa are reabsorbed by Sertoli cells. Unusual biflagellate spermatozoa with three long cytoplasmatic projections originating in the midpiece are rarely observed and have not been registered in other characiforms. Ultrastructural characteristics of the spermatogenesis and spermatozoa observed in the present work provide important subsidies to systematic and phylogeny studies of Characidae fishes included in Incertae sedis groups, such as H. marginatus.
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